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Energy-efficient landscaping is a type of landscaping designed for the purpose of conserving energy. There is a distinction between the embedded energy of materials and constructing the landscape, and the energy consumed by the maintenance and operations of a landscape.
Design techniques include:
- Planting trees for the purpose of providing shade, which reduces cooling costs.
- Planting or building windbreaks to slow winds near buildings, which reduces heat loss.
- Wall sheltering, where shrubbery or vines are used to create a windbreak directly against a wall.
- Earth sheltering and positioning buildings to take advantage of natural landforms as windbreaks.
- Green roofs that cool buildings with extra thermal mass and evapotranspiration.
- Reducing the heat island effect with pervious paving, high albedo paving, shade, and minimizing paved areas.
- Site lighting with full cut off fixtures, light level sensors, and high efficiency fixtures
Energy-efficient landscaping techniques include using local materials, on-site composting and chipping to reduce greenwaste hauling, hand tools instead of gasoline-powered, and also may involve using drought-resistant plantings in arid areas, buying stock from local growers to avoid energy in transportation, and similar techniques.
Video Energy-efficient landscaping
See also
- Building material
- Climate-friendly gardening
- Drought tolerance
- Drought-tolerant plants
- Energy conservation
- Garden design
- Green building
- Keyline design
- Landscape architecture
- Landscape design
- Landscape planning
- Natural materials
- Roof garden
- Sustainable architecture
- Sustainable gardening
- Sustainable landscape architecture
- Water conservation
- Xeriscaping
Maps Energy-efficient landscaping
External links
- The Green Building Sourcebook has a section on landscaping
- ecoLogical Home Ideas Magazine for green home building/remodeling
- Stopwaste.org
- Sustainable Residential Design: Increasing Energy Efficiency Resource Guide
src: www.electricconsumer.org
References
Source of article : Wikipedia